By Cordelia Hsu and Jill Gralow
SYDNEY (Reuters) – Australians packed into shopping malls on Thursday to stock up on supplies for the Christmas holiday season, spending money that might usually go toward overseas travel and cheering an annual rite that was threatened by the new coronavirus.
With travel and many social activities curtailed for most of the year by restrictions on movement intended to slow the virus, consumers have turned to home cooking and entertainment for their leisure – and spent up.
Australian retail sales rebounded a stronger-than-expected 1.4% in October, the most recent period covered by official data, and other figures have pointed to a solid recovery in the A$2 trillion ($1.5 trillion) economy.
Much of the spending has gone to online merchants, but with movement restrictions easing amid low numbers of new infections, shoppers have started returning to physical stores.
“I thought maybe we would be doing a lot more online shopping, so I feel really lucky that we can go into stores and have that physical experience,” said Jordan McCormack, a holiday shopper in Sydney. “When you look around at how busy the mall is, it’s like old times.”
Laticia Francini, another shopper on a muggy summer’s day in Sydney, said she had family in Italy where lockdowns had resumed following a rise in cases, so “we’re one of the luckiest countries in the world right now”.
Australia ended a weeks-long run without community transmissions with the most populous state, New South Wales, reporting three locally acquired cases in the previous 24 hours.
Industry body the Australian Retailers Association said it expects sales after Christmas Day on Dec. 25, when many stores offer discounts, to increase 3.9% over the same period a year earlier as people cash in on a swag of stimulus payments.
“The Australian economy is bouncing back,” said association CEO Paul Zahra in a statement. “Consumer confidence is on the rise, people are heading back to their favourite shops, and that’s reflected in these figures.”
($1 = 1.3130 Australian dollars)
(Reporting by Cordelia Hsu and Jill Gralow; Writing by Byron Kaye; Editing by Lincoln Feast.)